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Google Translate today has reached a decade of service, according to Google:

Ten years ago, we launched Google Translate. Our goal was to break language barriers and to make the world more accessible. Since then we’ve grown from supporting two languages to 103, and from hundreds of users to hundreds of millions.

The company says there are now over 500 million users of the service, who translate over 100 billion words daily; the most common translations are between English and Spanish, Arabic, Russian, Portuguese and Indonesian.

Approximately 92% of translations occur outside the U.S., and the country that uses Google Translate the most in the world is Brazil.

Google says the most common phrases translated are “how are you?”, “thank you” and “I love you”, while spikes also occur with current events and trends, noting how “selfie” has seen a huge surge in the past year, and “purple rain” queries spiked by over 25,000 percent over the last week, after the passing of musician Prince.

The Translate Community consists of 3.5 million people who have added over 90 million contributions, helping make the service more accurate.

Instant translations using your device’s camera (thanks to Word Lens technology) now works in 28 languages, while bilingual translation supports 32 languages. The feature also supports offline use for both iOS and Android.

I would say Google Maps and Google Translate are two of the most incredible services Google has to offer, which makes navigating and communicating around the world much, much easier.